Four policemen finally jailed for killing British aristocrat in Kenyan cell

Four policemen finally jailed for killing British aristocrat in Kenyan cell
Four policemen finally jailed for killing British aristocrat in Kenyan cell

Four police officers were last night jailed for torturing a young British aristocrat to death in a Kenyan cell, following a nine-year battle for justice.

The parents of Alexander Monson, 28, listened in anguish as a judge described how he was subjected to a savage and unprovoked onslaught.

But there was insufficient evidence to convict the officers of murder and the maximum term any of them will serve for manslaughter is ten years.

His tearful mother Hilary admitted that she was 'disappointed' by the sentences.

Mrs Monson, 67, said that it was a 'poor exchange' for the pain of losing Alexander and the long years she had spent waiting for a verdict.

Standing beside her on the court steps, however, Lord Nicholas Monson declared himself 'happy' with the outcome. 

Four police officers were last night jailed for torturing a young British aristocrat to death in a Kenyan cell, following a nine-year battle for justice

Four police officers were last night jailed for torturing a young British aristocrat to death in a Kenyan cell, following a nine-year battle for justice

'They aren't exactly going to a five-star hotel,' said Alexander's 66-year-old father, who flew 4,500 miles from London for the hearing.

'I would rather be hanged than stay in a Kenyan prison, even for a few years,' he added. 'They aren't going to be well received by their cellmates, that's for sure.'

Kenyan high court judge Eric Ogola said Alexander had been a 'young British baron' with 'the world in his pocket' when he was arrested for allegedly smoking cannabis outside a beachfront restaurant near Mombasa in May 2012.

The following morning, a family friend found him lying unconscious in the police station, having received violent blows to his head, groin and the arm he raised when attempting to protect himself.

He later died of a 'blunt force trauma' that caused bleeding to the brain. 

He had been taken to hospital and treated for a drug overdose on the insistence of the police, but the judge said this was clearly a 'red herring' invented to cover up the attack.

The parents of Alexander Monson, 28, listened in anguish as a judge described how he was subjected to a savage and unprovoked onslaught

The parents of Alexander Monson, 28, listened in anguish as a judge described how he was subjected to a savage and unprovoked onslaught

His tearful mother Hilary admitted that she was 'disappointed' by the sentences. Mrs Monson, 67, said that it was a 'poor exchange' for the pain of losing Alexander and the long years she had spent waiting for a verdict

His tearful mother Hilary admitted that she was 'disappointed' by the sentences. Mrs Monson, 67, said that it was a 'poor exchange' for the pain of losing Alexander and the long years she had spent waiting for a verdict

Standing beside her on the court steps, however, Lord Nicholas Monson declared himself 'happy' with the outcome

Standing beside her on the court steps, however, Lord Nicholas Monson declared himself 'happy' with the outcome

A toxicology report purportedly showing Alexander to have taken cocaine, diazepam and other substances had been falsified, the judge said. 

It was 'beyond a shadow of a doubt' that the fatal injury had been inflicted by an officer at Diani police station, near Mombasa, added Justice Ogola.

He said those who tortured Alexander were known to be policemen, including Chief Inspector Charles Munyuri, Corporal Naftali Chege, and Constables Ismael Baraka and John Pamba. 

But he said the court had not been able to find out exactly who killed him because of the 'blue code of silence' that protects Kenyan police who abuse their position.

The four were given manslaughter terms ranging between 15 and nine years, partly suspended. But the country's director of public prosecutions said he would appeal against the sentences and seek the strongest murder charge.

Alexander's divorced parents made heartrending victim statements to the Mombasa court.

'I'm sorry, I'm quite emotional,' Mrs Monson began, before explaining that what began as a justice campaign for her son had turned into a crusade for all Kenyan mothers whose children had been unjustly killed by the police.

She urged the judge to impose a sentence that sent out 'a firm message to others that we can't carry on in the old ways. 

That [the police] must reform for the sake of our sons. An example must be set'. Mrs Monson said she did not wish to question the judge's wisdom in bringing a manslaughter verdict.

But staring directly across the court at the four officers, she said plaintively: 'I'm sorry, but I'm disappointed today.'

Lord Monson had earlier stripped off his Covid mask to glower at the officers in the dock and videoed them with his phone.

The denouement of a three-year trial, which might never have taken placed but for the Monsons' relentless campaign for justice, was played out in a stifling, windowless courtroom, cooled only by rickety fans (the new air-conditioning system was faulty).

The judge's ruling was delayed for almost two hours, and Lord and Mrs Monson sat squashed on uncomfortable benches, flanked by friends and the British consul and vice-consul.

Those who tortured Alexander were known to be policemen, including Chief Inspector Charles Munyuri (pictured, Corporal Naftali Chege, and Constables Ismael Baraka and John Pamba

Those who tortured Alexander were known to be policemen, including Chief Inspector Charles Munyuri (pictured, Corporal Naftali Chege, and Constables Ismael Baraka and John Pamba

Ismael Baraka and John Pamba are seen sitting in the dock in the court in Kenya on Monday

Ismael Baraka and John Pamba are seen sitting in the dock in the court in

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